Decimals — introduction

Decimals — introduction

Decimals

Up to now, every number you wrote was a whole number — 1, 7, 84, 3 472. In Year 4 you meet decimals, which let you write numbers between the whole numbers.

A new place to the right

In a whole number, the rightmost digit is the ones. Decimals add new places to the right of a point: tenths, hundredths and (later) thousandths.

HundredsTensOnes.TenthsHundredths
003.47

So 3.47 means three ones, four tenths and seven hundredths.

The little dot is the decimal point. In many European countries (including SK, CS, DE, ES) people write a comma instead — for example 3,47. The maths is identical.

What a tenth is

Take 1 whole. Split it into ten equal parts. Each part is one tenth, written as 0.1.

0.1 =

0.2 =

0.9 =

1.0 = = one whole

You can see the tenths on a number line: ten equal jumps from 0 to 1.

What a hundredth is

0.1 = 10/100 (one row)
0.01 = 1/100 (one tiny square)

Now split one tenth into ten equal parts. Each part is one hundredth, written as 0.01.

0.01 =

0.10 = = = 0.1

0.47 =

It takes a hundred hundredths to make one whole.

Where decimals show up in real life

  • Money. £3.47 means 3 pounds and 47 hundredths of a pound (47 pence).
  • Length. 1.75 m is a metre and 75 hundredths of a metre.
  • Temperature. 36.6 °C is 36 degrees and 6 tenths.
  • Sports. A runner's 100 m time of 12.04 seconds is 12 seconds and 4 hundredths.

What you'll learn

Try it out